Abstract

Premise of the study: Diatoms are one of the most species-rich lineages of microbial eukaryotes. Similarities in clade age, species richness, and contributions to primary production motivate comparisons to flowering plants, whose genomes have been inordinately shaped by whole genome duplication (WGD). These events that have been linked to speciation and increased rates of lineage diversification, identifying WGDs as a principal driver of angiosperm evolution. We synthesized a relatively large but scattered body of evidence that, taken together, suggests that polyploidy may be common in diatoms.
Methods: We used data from gene counts, gene trees, and patterns of synonymous divergence to carry out the first large-scale phylogenomic analysis of genome-scale duplication histories for a phylogenetically diverse set of 37 diatom taxa.
Key results: Several methods identified WGD events of varying age across diatoms, though determining the exact number and placement of events and, more broadly, inferences of WGD at all, were greatly impacted by gene-tree uncertainty. Gene-tree reconciliations supported allopolyploidy as the predominant mode of polyploid formation, with particularly strong evidence for ancient allopolyploid events in the thalassiosiroid and pennate diatom clades.
Conclusions: Whole genome duplication appears to have been an important driver of genome evolution in diatoms. Denser taxon sampling will better pinpoint the timing of WGDs and likely reveal many more of them. We outline potential challenges in reconstructing paleopolyploid events in diatoms that, together with these results, offer a framework for understanding the evolutionary roles of genome duplication in a group that likely harbors substantial genomic diversity.